THE. NE..W YORKER Vietnam was being organized, she s,':tÏd, "We happened to be having a DuBois Club meeting last night, and r got a call from a member of the San Fran- cisco 'Vomen for Peace that they and the S.F. State DuBois Club were go- ing to have a demonstration against the bomhing at the Federal Building this afternoon. 'Ve thought we'd have a rally on Sproul steps at noon to try to get people, SO r called An Goldberg to see if the steps were available, since he's in Slate and usually knows about those things, and he said Slate had been planning a speech by David McReyn- olds, of the lVar Resisters League, on the steps today, so I asked him if we could combine meetings. Then we hoth got second calls-An from the l\1ay 2nd Movement, which had in- vited Fred Jerome, of the Progressive Lahor l\1ovement, to town, and I from the Campus Women for Peace. It was O.K. with me for Jerome to speak, and An asked if my father was in town, and the DuBois Club decided it would he a good idea to have him speak. 'Ve're going to meet at eleven o'clock at the fountain to make final arrangements." By noon, when McReynolds was starting to speak into a microphone that had been set up on the steps of Sproul Hall and two young men were climb- ing up one of the pillars to tie on a sign saying "lVithdraw Troops from Viet- nam," hundreds of students had gath- ered in the plaza. The method of at- tracting a crowd to a Sproul Hall rally is to begin speaking and try to catch the attention of some of the thousands of students passing through the plaza in the middle of the day. The crowd in the plaza during the Vietnam rally was always in three parts-a group of en- thusiastic supporters sitting on benches near the microphone, a much larger '" þ "1:" I i -- ., 'J I r" , I . . , . J I I'll Gds .. :. - ;.. ..........",'I1r_ "10 .. J .a '? ,- '" ( ; --{ .. << :J .' j 77 .' , <'r..r .Iii / I" , ! / -E . 4 1 .... , Edlcard L. Steiniger, Chairman o{' the Board, Sinclair Oil Corporat-ion "'" First Family of Photographers drnrt\ch Fabian Bachrach, photographer of men Bradford Bachrach, photographer of women 48 East 50th Street, New York. PL 5-6233 Chicago. Boston. Philadelphia. Washington. Short Hills, N. J. . Baltimore